Neuroscience
-
Our previous study revealed that acupuncture may exhibit therapeutic effects on Alzheimer's disease (AD) through the activation of metabolism in memory-related brain regions. However, the underlying functional mechanism remains poorly understood and warrants further investigation. In this study, we used resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) to explore the potential effect of electroacupuncture (EA) on the 5xFAD mouse model of AD. ⋯ Additionally, the expression of amyloid-β(Aβ) protein and deposition in the Hip showed a downward trend in the EA group compared to the Model group (p < 0.05). In conclusion, our findings indicate that EA treatment can improve the learning and memory abilities and inhibit the expression of Aβ protein and deposition of 5xFAD mice. This improvement may be attributed to the enhancement of the resting-state functional activity and connectivity within the limbic-neocortical neural circuit, which are crucial for cognition, motor function, as well as spatial learning and memory abilities in AD mice.
-
The aim was to investigate the long-term effects of a single episode of immature Status Epilepticus (SE) on the excitability of the septal and temporal hippocampus in vitro, by studying the relationship between interictal-like epileptiform discharges (IEDs) and high-frequency oscillations (HFOs; Ripples, Rs and Fast Ripples, FRs). A pentylenetetrazol-induced Status Epilepticus-(SE)-like generalized seizure was induced at postnatal day 20 in 22 male and female juvenile rats, sacrificed >40 days later to prepare hippocampal slices. Spontaneous IEDs induced by Mg2+-free ACSF were recorded from the CA3 area of temporal (T) or septal (S) slices. ⋯ Post-SE, in T slices all types of events duration (IED, R, FR) and the time lag between their onsets (R-IED, FR-IED, R-FR) increased, while FR/R peak power decreased; in S slices, the IED 1st population spike and the FR amplitudes, the R and FR peak power and the (percent) events where Rs or FRs preceded IEDs all decreased. The CA3 IED-HFO relationship offers insights to the septal-to-temporal synchronization patterns; its post-juvenile-SE changes indicate permanent modifications in the septotemporal excitability gradient. Moreover, these findings are in line to region-specific regulation of various currents post-SE, as reported in literature.
-
Extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) are serine/threonine-selective proteins and ERK1/2 can be phosphorylated in peripheral and central brain regions after cortical spreading depolarization (CSD) and calcitonin gene-related peptide; However, it remains unclear about whether and how ERK activity modulates CSD that correlates to migraine aura. Here, we determined the role of ERK in regulating CSD and explored the underlying mechanism involving transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1), a stress-sensing cation channel. CSD was recorded using intrinsic optical imaging in mouse brain slices, and electrophysiology in rats. ⋯ Mechanistic analysis showed that pre-treatment of an anti-TRPA1 antibody reduced the cytosolic pERK2 level but not pERK1 following CSD in cerebral cortices of rats and this level of pERK2 correlated with that of cerebral cortical IL-1β protein. Furthermore, an ERK activator, AES16-2M, but not its scrambled control, reversed the prolonged CSD latency by a TRPA1 inhibitor, HC-030031, in mouse brain slices. These data revealed a crucial role of ERK activity in regulating CSD, and elevation of pERK and IL-1β production induced by CSD is predominantly TRPA1 channel-dependent, thereby contributing to migraine pathogenesis.